Serving Aristocracy Serving Aristocracy
Knowledge Societies in History

Serving Aristocracy

Negotiation, Learning, and Mobility in an Early Modern Knowledge Community

Publisher Description

Serving Aristocracy is the history of social negotiation and mobility in an early modern knowledge community, centred on the aristocratic De la Gardie family and their sphere of manors and estates in seventeenth-century Sweden.

Focusing on underprivileged women and men and the knowledge community that shaped their interactions, social negotiations, and mobility, this book documents ordinary people’s lives and work in an aristocratic sphere. It uses the De la Gardie bureaucracy’s meticulous records to full effect, charting servants’ experiences, learning, and agency. The unique collection of petitions provides an invaluable insight into how servants viewed their own backgrounds, personal predicaments, and hopes for the future, and how they negotiated their work and wage. It reveals the aristocratic estate organization not only as a workplace, but also as a training ground where knowledge circulation was as fundamental as socialization, social negotiation, and networking. At the same time, Serving Aristocracy exposes the flaws in the aristocratic mindset: the De la Gardies’ organization was hierarchical, paternalistic, and feudal, and employees were forced to live at the mercy of their masters.

This is the ideal resource for students and scholars interested in knowledge, mobility, and agency in an early modern aristocratic work sphere.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2025
February 14
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
208
Pages
PUBLISHER
Taylor & Francis
SELLER
Taylor & Francis Group
SIZE
4.6
MB
Knowledge Actors Knowledge Actors
2023
Circulation of Knowledge Circulation of Knowledge
2018
Regulating Knowledge in an Entangled World Regulating Knowledge in an Entangled World
2022
Threatened Knowledge Threatened Knowledge
2021
Histories of Knowledge in Postwar Scandinavia Histories of Knowledge in Postwar Scandinavia
2020
Knowledge and the Early Modern City Knowledge and the Early Modern City
2019
Early Modern Knowledge Societies as Affective Economies Early Modern Knowledge Societies as Affective Economies
2020